Her Husband Brought His Mistress To The Will Reading. Then The Letter Opened-nga9999 - Chainityai

Her Husband Brought His Mistress To The Will Reading. Then The Letter Opened-nga9999

I thought grief would be the hardest thing waiting for me inside that conference room.

I was wrong.

Grief had already been sitting with me for two weeks by then.

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It had followed me through the hospital corridor after Margaret Caldwell took her last breath.

It had stood beside me at the funeral home while I chose flowers Ethan said he was too busy to discuss.

It had ridden in the passenger seat on the way to the cemetery, quiet and heavy, while my husband answered messages with his phone angled away from me.

By the morning of the will reading, grief felt familiar.

Humiliation did not.

The conference room at Harlan & Pierce was on the eighth floor of a downtown office building, the kind with elevators that smelled faintly like metal and old perfume.

I wore a black dress I had already worn too many times that month.

The fabric scratched the inside of my elbow where the sleeve seam had come loose.

My hair was pinned back, but not well.

I remember that because I noticed my reflection in the dark glass door before I opened it, and for one strange second I did not recognize the woman staring back at me.

She looked tired.

Not elegant.

Not heartbroken in some beautiful, cinematic way.

Just tired.

The kind of tired that settles into your face after you have spent too many nights wondering why the person beside you feels farther away than an empty room.

Inside, the air was cold.

The fluorescent lights hummed overhead.

A tray of paper coffee cups sat near the center of the table, and the whole room smelled like stale coffee, toner, and expensive carpet cleaner.

A crooked framed print of the Gateway Arch hung behind the head of the table.

I remember thinking Margaret would have hated that print being crooked.

She had been particular about things like that.

Her napkins had to be folded a certain way.

Her checkbook had to balance to the penny.

Her porch flag had to be taken in before storms.

For years, I thought that kind of control meant she did not like me.

I thought she tolerated me because I was Ethan’s wife, not because she saw me.

Then I saw who was sitting at the far end of the table.

Ethan was there.

So was Lauren Whitaker.

And in Lauren’s arms was a newborn baby wrapped in a soft gray knit blanket.

For a moment, my body refused to understand what my eyes had already recognized.

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